1 / 15

Outsourcing of Social Services in Bulgaria

Outsourcing of Social Services in Bulgaria. Social Services – basic facts. Providers of social services – municipal authorities , state, NGOs, commercial entities; The State as a provider – the Child Protection Departments;

orien
Télécharger la présentation

Outsourcing of Social Services in Bulgaria

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Outsourcing of Social Services in Bulgaria

  2. Social Services – basic facts • Providers of social services – municipal authorities, state, NGOs, commercial entities; • The State as a provider – the Child Protection Departments; • The private service providers – donor funded and contracted by municipal authorities; • Municipality – service provision and outsourcing. 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  3. Financing of Social Services at Municipal Level • State-delegated social services – state subsidy on the basis of per capita standards for a government determined list of social services; • Financed by own revenues. 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  4. Legislative Framework on Outsourcing of Social Services • Special Procedure different from the public procurement law • Social Assistance Act – 1998 • Implementing Regulations for the Social Assistance Act – amendments in 2003 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  5. Initiation of Outsourcing • International donor – USAID and WB involvement; • Outsourcing under the Child Welfare Reform Project in 10 pilot municipalities. 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  6. Outsourcing Bidding Procedure (as outlined in legislation) • Legislation regulates mainly the bidding procedure. It doesn’t go into the relationships after contract signing. • Described very broadly; • Competitive procedure (single source selection only in exceptional cases); • No requirement for separate technical and financial proposal. 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  7. Outsourcing Practice • More than 20 (out of 262) municipalities have contracted service provision to private providers; • Municipalities prefer to contract out newly established community-based services; • Bidding procedures – modifications in different municipalities; • Contract duration – from 1 to 5 years; 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  8. Outsourcing Practice • Principle of funding – monthly tranches; • Reporting – different practices, but in general monthly and bigger accent to financial reporting. 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  9. Regulatory Mechanisms in the Process of Outsourcing • Minimum quality standards; • Licensing for private service providers; • Inspections and control. 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  10. Conclusions – main achievements and advantages • Outsourcing has generally gained acknowledgment both by the Government and the municipal authorities; • Better quality of service provision – flexibility (in terms of staff structure, salaries, management practices, financial management, etc.), regular supervision, access to best practices, new approach to beneficiaries; • Helped dividing case management from service provision; 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  11. Conclusions – main achievements and advantages • Relieved municipal authorities from service provision, freed capacity for service monitoring and planning; • Introduced proper monitoring of service quality for the first time. 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  12. Conclusions – main challenges • Unification and improvement of procurement procedures; • Linking financing to quality of services in order to encourage municipalities to outsource; • Introduction of unified financial per capita standards for all state-delegated social services; 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  13. Conclusions – main challenges • Introducing a more flexible financial mechanism and reporting procedures for contracts; • Introduction of specific quality standards in order to provide common ground for objective monitoring of quality; • Developing capacity of NGOs for service provision; 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  14. Conclusions – main challenges • Developing capacity of municipal authorities for management and monitoring of service provision; • Contracting out existing and especially residential type social services. 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

  15. Thank you for your attention! 3-6 July, Sofia, Bulgaria

More Related